That's what's unique about it. Having the CHP provides us efficiencies in the wood pellet plant for drying biomass and the pellets, and with the waste steam from those situations, we want to do a greenhouse. The price of vegetables in these communities.... Further north, it's even more than us.
Everything we've done in our project is to maximize benefit for the community, for jobs, and that's very challenging. We have some skills issues. We're working with a bunch of funders. Ryerson University has come in and provided us with an incredible amount of funding to hire a workforce coordinator.
It has been so hard. There are so many pieces to the project. Now we have a plant, but do we have a workforce? We have so many people who have dropped out of high school based on no hope and no jobs. It's a very hard thing to describe unless you've been in it and live in it.
I think Craig could even talk about the drug treatment program. It's part of our project. I know the bioeconomy is why we're here today, but everything is related in an indigenous community like ours. We started our own community-based drug treatment program with our own funding, and it ended up being ranked one of the highest in Canada, and then it actually secured funding.
I think you have 36 or so people in there now, right?